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TITLE: TIME magazine
[The news-magazine of the century, with all the news, features, and vintage ADS! See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE: JUNE 13, 1983; Vol. 121, No. 24
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: LOS ANGELES. America's uneasy new melting pot. Inset: Astronaut SALLY RIDE. Cover: Illustration by Nicholas Gaetano.

COVER: Los Angeles is being invaded by immigrants seeking a better life. They are changing the beat, bop and character of the city, often clinging to their customs, languages and old-country prejudices. See NATION.

WORLD: Applying diplomatic skills to his pinstriped bailiwick, Shultz names his own man for El Salvador. Meddling neighbors menace Honduras' fragile democracy. o Emergency in Peru. An anxious war of nerves in Lebanon.

SALLY'S RIDE: Crashing a once exclusive brotherhood, a young physicist with plenty of the Right Stuff is about to embark on a complex mission with four male colleagues that will make her the first American woman in orbit. See SPACE.

NATION: After the summit, Washington considers a Soviet appeal. A DC-9 fire kills 23. An attack on Henry Kissinger.

DANCE: Twyla Tharp's Once Upon a Time, a new ballet for Mikhail Baryshnikov, adds sizzle to a solid A.B.T. season in New York City.

ESSAY: In America's Hispanic communities, a new bilingualism threatens to lead to a con- fusion of tongues and purposes.

CINEMA: With Richard Pryor aboard, Superman III is the best yet. Eddie Murphy hits it big in Trading Places. Jedi: $45 million.

EDUCATION: University reforms proposed by France's Socialist government bring students to the streets and elitism into question.

BOOKS: The Name ofthe Rose is a medieval Sherlock Holmesian fantasy. i' Gore Vidal offers a shotgun satire of America in Duluth.

ECONOMY & BUSINESS: Mexico staggers under its mountain of debt. ' Atari's short circuit. b. Conrail for sale. The new office etiquette.

MUSIC: Elusive German Conductor Carlos Kleiber, in a rare U.S. appearance with the Chicago Symphony, lives up to his legend.

LAW: Victims of injury increasingly look past muggers or uninsured drivers to the deeper pockets of wealthy third parties.

COMPUTERS: Students who may never crack a book are lining up to use the latest thing in libraries: electronic encyclopedias.

SEXES: New attacks on research by Masters and Johnson prompt sex therapists to reexamine their methods, claims and cures.


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